Wanting to get flatter trajectories to buck the wind.
If by 'buck the wind' you mean reducing lateral wind drift, going to a heavier load to compensate for wind drift will be only marginally effective. A heavier load will decrease the flight time from muzzle to target to some extent but it's not a cure-all. For example, suppose you have a 10 mph cross wind, and a target out at 100 yds. The two roundball trajectory tables I checked say that a .535 ball will drift 10 inches in 100 yds with a muzzle velocity of 1700 fps, and 8.5 inches with a mv of 2100 fps. To go from 1700 to 2100 fps would likely require a change in powder charge around 40 or 50 grains, and I'd expect that much variation in charge to affect group size more than the the 1.5 inches you might gain by the reduced time-of-flight.
You're going to experiment on the range anyway, so I'd suggest you consider finding the load that gives you best group size for the energy you need to deliver to the intended target (e.g. real grizzly bears need to get hit with a heavier load than the NMLRA standing bear paper target). Then, via wind flags, or reading wind cues like how much tree limbs are blowing, or a handheld anemometer, etc, estimate the cross-wind speed and apply Kentucky windage corresponding to cross wind speed and your load's muzzle velocity.
Good shooting.